Definitely Not A Cop said:
HollywoodBQ said:
agjacent said:
But sure, this was *not* an unforced error and in no way will this hurt republicans by one single vote. Also, 450K Puerto Ricans live in Pennsylvania. :-)
I'm going to have to look that one up but I did see this tweet sharing the number of Puerto Ricans in some key states.
Question for you, what is the attitude for the home country for most PR immigrants?
For the past 80-100 years, New York City has been the dream destination for a lot of people on the island.
Everybody knows that any Puerto Rican who can make it in the mainland USA will move there because there is more opportunity, higher wages, etc.
Puerto Rico has been losing people for decades. The peak population was about 3.8 million in the year 2000. Now it's down around 3.2 million. There are tons of Puerto Ricans living in the mainland USA.
Here's a site I found showing the numbers by state.
https://puertoricoreport.com/puerto-rican-population-in-the-states/Statehood or Independence is still a looming question out there. The last few votes have been FOR statehood. And usually some Puerto Rican Representative out of Chicago will introduce a Statehood bill that will get support from 7 or 8 Representatives and then nothing ever happens.
I think that most Puerto Ricans who have made it in the mainland USA still love to visit but, aren't willing to give up what they've got to go back and try to fix things.
Frankly, it's a very similar scenario to what you see with Indians working in the USA. They've made it and the folks who are left behind (in India) aren't as capable. In PR, they also might be completely corrupt too. We saw that with the mayor of San Juan during Hurricane Maria and relief efforts.
There have been some successful economic programs over the years but these days, if you're looking for cheap labor, you're going to Asia so PR can't really compete in that race to the bottom.